It's not how far you go but how go you far.

September 10, 2009

The Worst Sports Column of All-Time

Box scores were not available to her from June 10, 1991 until Aug. 31 of this year.

She never saw a highlight. Never got to the ballpark for Beach Towel Night. Probably hasn't high-fived in a while.

She
was not allowed to spike a volleyball. Or pitch a softball. Or smack a
forehand down the line. Or run in a 5-footer for double bogey.

Now, that's deprivation.

Can
you imagine? Dugard was 11 when she was kidnapped and stashed in
Phillip Garrido's backyard. She was 29 when she escaped. Penitentiary
inmates at least get an hour of TV a day. Dugard was cut off from
everything but the elements.

How long before she fully digests the world she re-enters? How difficult to adjust to such cataclysmic change?

More than that, who's going to explain the fact that there's a President Obama?

Dugard's
stepfather says she's going to need a lot of therapy — you think? — so
perhaps she should take a respite before confronting the new realities.

So, Jaycee, whenever you're ready, here's what you've missed:

•Barry
Bonds, who was just leading the Pirates to their second NL East title,
wound up breaking Henry Aaron's home run record. How did such a skinny
guy manage that? We'll deal with that later.

•Well, actually,
some baseball players began taking drugs in order to hit more home runs
and throw faster fastballs. Football players, who had cornered the
market on most of their drugs, began driving drunk, slapping their
wives, selling drugs, and killing people. The baseball players caught
more grief.

•Michael Jordan did indeed win the big one, and five others.

•Yeah, this golfer really is named Tiger Woods.

•Stock car drivers now marry international models and are invited to the White House.

•Domed stadiums, like the ones in Houston and Minneapolis, are considered obsolete, or at least unfit for baseball.

•John
McEnroe became a respected television analyst, just as tennis adopted a
replay system that eliminated the need for McEnroe to argue.

•Magic Johnson is a billionaire businessman, and most of us have forgotten just why he had to retire.

•Or Stanley Cup championships for the Kings, even though Wayne Gretzky took them to the Finals in 1993.

•Mike Tyson now makes fun of himself in movies.

•The Anaheim Ducks won the Stanley Cup in '07. Yeah, a hockey team came to Anaheim. Yeah, they built an arena in Anaheim.

•I know you've had trouble digesting all this so far, but they also built a basketball arena at USC. Honest to God.

•A guy from East L.A. named Oscar De La Hoya now makes boxing contenders rich and famous. Just as he did when he was boxing.

•The Angels won a World Series. When you learn who they beat, you'll understand why.

•Speaking
of the Giants they did not move, but they did get a new stadium
downtown. The Florida Marlins, who did not exist when you left, won two
World Series and are getting their own ballpark. Even if you were
there, it's hard to believe.

•For the most part, fans have stopped doing The Wave.

•In fact, you don't see many beach balls in Dodger Stadium or Angel Stadium anymore.

•The
two NFL teams that we used to have? They've been gone for 15 years. You
haven't heard anyone complain about that? Neither have we.

•Jackie Autry isn't in charge of the Angels anymore, as you might have surmised by looking at the standings.

•Joe
Torre now manages the Dodgers, after a fruitful detour through New
York. Tommy Lasorda? Sure, he's around. He hasn't called?

•You disappeared a couple of months before John Daly came into our lives at the '91 PGA. Who's John Daly? Never mind.

•Todd Marinovich showed why careers aren't played on paper.

•USC is one of college football's elite programs, three coaches later.

•The Red Sox won two World Series, which proves that history is bunk. The White Sox even won one. But not the Cubs.

•Cal
Ripken Jr. broke Lou Gehrig's record for consecutive games played but
never threatened Vladimir Guerrero's record for most consecutive swings.

•One blessed constant remains: Vin Scully.

•And
ballplayers, who always invent the slang no matter what ESPN would have
you believe, came up with an expression for a home run that you might
appreciate.